As much of Australia returns to work. Many business and employees are wondering what are their obligations to maintain a safe workplace. Many are concerned with how the recovery phase will look and are wondering about a second wave of COVID-19 that could effect their businesses again and in effect, cause them to have to close up for good.
What are some practical steps you can do to create a safer workplace for you, your staff and your customers?
AHS Sydney are committed to helping you through this journey with all the things you might need for the recovery phase.
As businesses try to recover from the impact of COVID-19 on the economy and the impacts on them, there will be some significant questions and planning required that will have consequences for the size and make-up of the workforce, the way that work is performed and what work is actually done.
Some of these big questions are likely to include:
As businesses start to respond to COVID-19, there should certainly be consideration as to whether employment arrangements. Creating workplace flexibility and being able to drive efficiencies should be a key focus for business moving forward.
The National Cabinet has agreed ten National COVID-19 Safe Workplace Principles which include, among others, that:
> As COVID-19 restrictions are gradually relaxed, businesses, workers and other duty holders must work together to adapt and promote safe work practices, consistent with advice from health authorities, to ensure their workplaces are ready for the social distancing and exemplary hygiene measures that will be an important part of the transition.
> Businesses and workers must actively control against the transmission of COVID-19 while at work, consistent with the latest advice from the Australian Health Protection Principal Committee (AHPPC), including considering the application of a hierarchy of appropriate controls where relevant.
> Businesses and workers must prepare for the possibility that there will be cases of COVID-19 in the workplace and be ready to respond immediately, appropriately, effectively and efficiently, and consistent with advice from health authorities."
In the immediate to short term, WHS risk management will be a key driver for physical change in the workplace (which can already be seen in the floor markings, increased signage and screens among other measures) as well as a hyper vigilance around workplace cleaning, worker hygiene and physical distancing.
It will also require renewed risk management focus around work-related travel and customer/client interaction; where previously the focus may have been on fatigue, mental health and occupational violence risks, there will now also be consideration of the risk of exposure to COVID-19 and infectious diseases.
Safe Work Australia's information for workplaces regarding how to minimize the risk of exposure to COVID-19 includes a number of useful checklists including for physical distancing, cleaning and health, hygiene and facilities, all of which will assist businesses to address the immediate need to create COVID-19 safe workplaces.
In the longer term, the impact of COVID-19 is likely to significantly impact workplace design, from the possible death of open plan offices (at least without screening) and hot desking, continued widespread use of working from home and video conferencing facilities, to the reduction in the number of worker 'touch-points' including by increased use of automated office design technology such as sensor doors and lifts and bathroom facilities, to directing the flow of persons in one direction for entry and another for exits from workplaces, among many other factors.
The key for businesses will come down to planning both for the immediate- and short-term recovery phase, but also for the longer-term workplace of the future. The recovery phase planning will likely address all of the measures referred to above and those matters contained in the Safe Work Australia information in addition to the National COVID-19 Coordination Commission's 'Planning tool to help businesses reopen and be COVIDSafe' . The planning will also necessarily involve consideration of how to flex back to more a responsive stage to quickly and effectively respond to any potential for 'second wave' infections.
Some of the considerations for employers for planning the recovery phase would include:
We have referred to COVID-19 and the return to work/workplace, but in reality there may not be the same numbers of employees returning to the workplace as there were previously. Employers will need to manage the complexity of workforce logistics with one eye on anti-discrimination legislation and the other on legislative and award compliance, while also balancing the operational needs to be responsive in a possibly changed market.
Some of the issues that employers should be considering are:
> Employers will need to be very much alive to the legal risks around employees seeking greater flexibility, including as carers and vulnerable people who are at greater risk of serious infection from COVID-19. How employers make decisions about employee flexibility and the reasons that underpin these decisions may result in potential discrimination and adverse action claims, as well as possible breaches of the Fair Work Act, awards and enterprise agreements.
We know many businesses are already planning for the new normal. We have been working with many of our clients about this planning phase. Please let us know how we can help you manage your risks as your business returns to 'COVID -19 normal'.